Technology is not the problem, it's the mis-management and mis-understanding of technology that is the problem. When you can light a gas stove with a flick of the wrist, that is a great thing, yet a prudent person knows how to make fire with a flint and steel or bow drill. My GPS is great for navigation, yet I make sure my son know how to shoot and work a noon-sight with our sextant. Of course, we're crazy.
People live in cities, on average just a scant three days away from the beginnings of starvation and squalor, and never give it a thought. Nor do they think about how their excrement magically vanishes, or how fragile those and other systems of civilized living really are. It is this easy life that of complacency that breeds ignorance of fundamental skills and knowledge of how things work, not technology. If you are truly lucky, it won't matter. If you are truly unlucky, you'll be eaten alive. Between those two extremes lies the middle.
Further, it is easy to observe (once you give up most of your own participation) that the constant battering ram of useless but important information, the Tweets, the Facebook feeds, Snapchats, emails, texts, politics, and news news news, that many people constantly subject themselves to results in so much going in that little of consequence comes out. Far from the commonly accepted lay belief that the constant barrage of information and contact makes us productive, the loss of productivity is both staggering and well documented. The misallocation of our attentions is the problem. However, you can't blame the either media or technology for giving you what you want. The blame lies with the consumer. It's up to you to shut it off. Most can't, or won't, and all manner of excuses are proffered, very similar to other common addictions. And that's it.